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Author Topic: Article III An overview of the entire Article III Judicial setup by Jim Davies  (Read 3006 times)
DennisLeeWilson
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« on: 2009-January-25 11:54:45 AM »

Judge Narragansett's New Constitution Project
http://tinyurl.com/Narragansett-Constitution

Article III  An overview of the entire Article III Judicial setup by Jim Davies
http://atlasshruggedcelebrationday.com/simplemachinesforum/index.php?topic=136.msg312#msg312

From: DennisLeeWilson-Ariz-Wyo  (Original Message) Sent: 7/18/2007 5:39 PM

This copyrighted article is so appropriate to this subject that I made arrangements to republish it in its entirety. (See Reprint Rights below). DLW
 
http://www.strike-the-root.com/71/davies/davies12.html
 
Article Three

by Jim Davies

Exclusive to STR

April 18, 2007

There is a rich variety of reasons why a "minimal government" cannot work, starting with the entirely sufficient one that since every human owns his own life, any interference with his exercise of that fundamental right imposes a negative effect upon his wellbeing.

Here, though, I offer a consideration I think to be new, and of interest to those minarchists who believe that the US Constitution would form an ideal basis for a limited-government society. Their reasons are, I understand, that (a) human nature is flawed and so eradication of criminal behavior (that which overrules somebody's self-governance right) is impossible, (b) that unavoidable degree of criminality is best minimized by an elected government with powers limited by a written Constitution, and (c) the US Constitution and especially its Bill of Rights form such a sublime example of that needed limitation as to be beyond improvement and probably God-given.

I deny all three of those reasons, and the logical contradiction in (b) - that criminal behavior is best minimized by instituting an organization whose very nature is criminal from tip to toe--is especially absurd. But I want to focus here on (c). "Patriots" and other admirers of the Constitution see it as so close to Holy Writ as to need no serious differentiation, and in particular that the men who drafted it were uniquely eager to do their utmost to establish a government unfortunately necessary (for example, to provide an efficient, socialized defense system lest the British return for a second round) but whose powers were soundly and tightly limited. In current terms, those drafters are seen by those admirers as Libertarians or Classical Liberals, and their sincerity is not doubted.

I have for quite a while perceived the Founders as mistaken, but for many years I shared that belief in their sincerity--that they were mistaken to suppose that any slight degree of government was required, but sincere in their wish to maximize individual self-ownership in practice by setting tight limits on its powers. I think now that I was wrong to suppose that they were sincere--and so that their work should not be admired in any degree.

My first doubts about their sincerity were expressed here and pointed out that the Preamble to the US Constitution is a pack of lies. The further doubts expressed here derive from Article Three--and it's worth digressing via that link to read it now. It's very short--which ought at once to arouse suspicions.

Notice, if you will, what this Article does. Like numbers One and Two, it sets up a branch of the new Federal Government--the "Judicial" one. It says "the judicial power shall be vested in "an arrangement of courts, at whose apex lies the Supreme Court. It specifies the types of case that this Branch shall hear, and states that in criminal cases, trials shall be by jury. It warns that judges must remain of "good behavior." And that's about it. The whole thing is done, in a mere 390 words.

The wording completely fails to spell out what the phrase "judicial power" means or includes--and does not include--or how many shall sit on the required "jury" or what its powers shall be, relative to the judge's. It completely fails to define what "good behavior" means or who shall determine it. In effect, Article Three is a carte blanche. It's a delegation of presumably enormous power but with no stated components or limitations at all.

It stands in stark contrast with Article One, which uses 2,268 words to specify in much detail not just how Congress is to be elected and operated, but exactly what its (few) powers shall be and shall not be, and with the 1,025 words in Article Two, which details how the Executive Branch shall take office and what its powers shall and shall not be. How are we to interpret this astonishing contrast, this massive change of pace and lack of oversight concern; and in particular how can it square with a belief in the sincerity of the writers?

One possible answer is that everybody knows what "judicial power" does and doesn't include, and what juries can and cannot do, and what "good behavior" is all about--and so it wasn’t necessary for Article Three to spell out such matters. This is in summary the argument used by Professor Randy Barnett in an interesting paper about one important component power--the one given the Supreme Court to nullify laws that it finds unconstitutional. Because that wasn't spelled out, it's been controversial ever since; Barnett argues persuasively that the "public meaning" of the phrase "judicial power" certainly included that one, and so the Founders did not need to spell it out.

Barnett may well be right. Notice though what follows, if he is:

·                     * Since "everybody knows" what legislatures and executives do as well as courts (respectively, they write and execute laws), there would be little if any need to detail what they, too, were to be and do; therefore Articles One and Two are superfluous or at any rate far too long. And yet, there they are.

·                     * In order to know in full detail what powers courts possess under the Constitution, we need to know in equal detail what was the "public meaning" of the phrase "judicial power" back in 1787. Barnett's research gives good reason to agree that it did include a nullification power; but what else? After 220 years, how can anyone possibly find out?

·                    * The power to nullify unconstitutional laws means that courts must have the power to interpret all laws--if only so as to separate sheep from goats. And if they can say what any law means, then in effect the Judicial Branch and not the Legislative Branch is the one that actually determines what is and is not the law of the land. In court, the "law" is whatever the judge says it is; he may be made of tin, but he certainly is a god.

·                    * Then if courts (judges) can properly define what is and is not law, it follows that they can properly instruct juries about the applicable laws in any case, and prohibit any power of jury nullification; yet when juries were set up in 1215, the power of nullification was their primary purpose; the English Peers established them as a way to prevent King John continuing as an absolute monarch. If the Constitution by Article Three cancelled that vital jury power, we're well on the way back to being an absolute monarchy--or at least to an oligarchy of lawyers. Maybe that was no accident.

So the other possible answer is that the 55 men who convened to draft the US Constitution, all of them being politicians and 35 of them being lawyers, knew perfectly well that Article Three would provide the new government with powers that, over time, would break through all supposed limits and deliberately designed it so--that is, they were no more "sincere libertarians" than your run-of the-mill legalized crook in Congress today. They presented the new government as being limited and constituted of, by and for "The People" (a clear fraud anyway, as Spooner has proven) but in reality it was set up of, by and for themselves, as lawyers--in such a way that lawyers could drive a coach and four through the supposed limits any time they saw fit. Let's give that possible answer the whistle test.

The 39 signers did their work in full knowledge that a mere half-century earlier, Peter Zenger had been acquitted only after some persistent advocacy by Andrew Hamilton and a very courageous jury insistence on nullification, in the teeth of directives by the NY judge that he was clearly guilty and must be found guilty, of besmirching the Governor's good name. This was a famous case, and it's not credible that it was not very well known to all present in Philly as well as virtually all of "the public." At that time, therefore, the "public meaning" of the phrase "judicial power" certainly included the power to treat juries as if they were a minor nuisance in court. Therefore, in proposing to grant "judicial power," that case alone cried out for specific clarification at least about whether judges had the power to instruct juries on what the law says, and whether juries have the power to overturn any they think bad. And yet, as we've seen, the 39 were silent. To call that careless is not credible. They must have omitted such wording on purpose, so as to give judges the greatest possible latitude.

The 39 also knew perfectly well that they met in the very State named after William Penn, whose Westward migration followed his harrowing experience with the justice system in London; he had preached in the street contrary to law, and was acquitted only after his jury nullified that law despite vicious and repeated instructions from the judge to "hurry up and find him guilty"--they were imprisoned in the jury room for several days without food or toilets. Again, when setting up a new government and granting a "judicial power," it is simply not credible that the Founders would omit all guidance about this crucially important allocation of power unless they intended to--leaving the matter vague on purpose so that most courts would bring verdicts in accordance with the judge's wishes--something that happens today with sickening regularity, notably in cases relating to drugs and taxes.

That is my case for suggesting that the Founders knew very well what they were doing when they left Article Three wide open to interpretation and placed no limits on the judicial power. I say they carefully crafted a Constitution that appeared to give only specific and limited powers to the central government, while providing an escape route through which, in the generations following, any edict could be enforced in total disregard of those limits. The end result was a charter that would appeal to most Americans as giving them power over their own government, while in practice and with effect increasing over time, it would ensure the government had absolute power over the people. What we see all around us today is exactly what was planned.

This has, I hope, removed all remaining grounds for a naive belief in the goodness of Government Man--which in any case flatly contradicts the minarchist's other belief, that all humans have a bias towards evil. The Founders weren't sincere but mistaken minarchists--they were not minarchists at all; they met to establish a government, they established one good and hard without any effective limit on its powers, and they did that by deception, and the open ends of Article Three are the smoking gun.

I shall no longer refer to them with a capital "F".  




Jim Davies is a retired businessman in New Hampshire who has written on freedom topics in newspapers and at TakeLifeBack.com, and wants to experience a free society in his lifetime.

« Last Edit: 2012-November-25 11:59:12 PM by DennisLeeWilson » Logged

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« Reply #1 on: 2010-May-08 05:16:13 PM »

At LewRockwell.com, where reprint permission is more rational, Jim Davies has more to say about Article 3

http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig6/davies2.1.1.html

1789

by Jim Davies

Previously by Jim Davies: Where Not To Throw Stones


It's often said that America was once a free country, but that its freedom has been heavily damaged by a relentless growth in government. Some (like Aaron Russo in his documentary America: from Freedom to Fascism) date the decline from 1913, when the Federal Reserve was chartered and the Income Tax enacted; but I no longer think it began that late. The "Pristine State" advocates suppose that there was once in our history a kind of Eden from which we have fallen, and so that all we need now is somehow to get back there – to "constitutional rule." There wasn't, and we don't. I think our troubles began no later than 1789.

The drafting was done in 1787, and the needed nine States had ratified it by June 21st, 1788, so the Constitution became supreme law on that day. Then on March 3rd 1789 Congress opened its doors and the following month George Washington presided. It's very interesting to notice what the new Congress did, in its first session, from March through September of that year.

It committed six acts, before going home for the winter in September. See if any of them give you warm, fuzzy feelings; and in a moment I'll focus on the sixth, because of its huge importance.

First came some administration; deciding on how oaths of office were to be taken. Not too much there to bother us.

Second was the "Hamilton Tariff," under which revenue was to be raised. So the second-ever Act of the US Congress was to arrange for the confiscation of property. Sure, it was Constitutional – it was a set of tariffs, imposed on certain imports; some must have recalled that it was a tariff on tea that had sparked the Revolution in the first place, so may have wondered whether anything had changed except the geographic location of the thieves. The import duties favored Northern manufacturers by making foreign goods seem more expensive – it was protectionist – and hurt Southerners by making them pay more. From Day One, a division was being fashioned that led after seventy years to open warfare. So the first substantive thing Congress did was to start to set the scene for internal conflict.

Third came an establishment of "Foreign Affairs" – now the Department of State – by which the new government was to execute "policies" towards other nations. If the intention was to have a perfectly uniform policy towards all, that would not have been needed. By establishing one, it was clear there were to be some nations more favored, others less favored. That's what a "foreign policy" means, and it is ultimately the cause of war and, in our own era, of the unconventional war called "terrorism"; for had there been no foreign policy favoring Israel (recall Biden's call in March for "no space" between the policies of the US and Israel?) there would have been no 9/11, or if there had been one favoring Palestinians there would have been a "9/11" much sooner and much more devastating, executed by Mossad. So the third Act in the history of the new government was to set the scene for all future external conflict.

Fourth was an Act to set up a Department of War – now euphemized as "Defense" – and that was very logical. You play favorites with other nations, eventually you'll need to fight some of them. Better get ready.

Fifth came the Department of the Treasury, to take in and account for the collection and spending of the money confiscated by Act Two. It is to this Department that today's IRS belongs, so I need say no more.

So far, it's not too hard to detect the beginnings of all the most loathsome attributes of any government: tax, distortion, discord and warfare. This is to what our well-meaning "Constitutionalist" friends want to get us back.

The sixth action of that first session bore fruit on September 24th, 1789 and was the "Judiciary Act" – and it's notorious and breathtaking. Here's why.

On its face, its purpose was just to flesh out Article Three, which said there was to be a Judicial Branch in the new government. It had to do with establishing Courts – Supreme, District, Circuit – and government Attorneys, General and less general. But as well as that administrative stuff, the 1789 Judiciary Act declared that the Supreme Court had the power to hear actions for "writs of mandamus" as one of original jurisdiction, and so not to be just a court of appeal. Congress was therefore purporting to grant to its sister Branch a power which Article Three never gave it.

Oops! Right off the bat, in its very first session, Congress therefore tried to do something it was not empowered to do (if you'll allow for the moment that, contrary to Spooner, the Constitution actually empowered anyone to do anything). In so doing, Congress demonstrated its disdain for the fences placed around it by Articles Two and Five. Very clearly, government today acknowledges no limits on its power; the 1789 Judiciary Act made it plain that Congress never did acknowledge such limits, even in its very first session.

Was this arrogation of power deliberate, or inadvertent?

Either is possible if the Act is considered in isolation, but it wasn't isolated. While the Constitution was being drafted, Alexander Hamilton and other Federalists had wanted to specify powers for the Judicial Branch, just as the charter did for the other two Branches, and in particular to grant it the power of "Judicial Review," i.e., to say what is, and is not, valid law. He argued that that is what high courts normally do. However in Article Three no powers were granted to it at all, so as it's fair to presume that it was not to have zero powers (otherwise, why set it up?) consequently Article Three left them wide open – for unlike the wording of Articles I and II there are no limits or prohibitions named, either. It was a blank check, whose detail could be filled in later.

If Hamilton had had his way and the Constitution as drafted had said something like "The Supreme Court shall have power to decide what is law and what is not law" the new government would have been plainly seen as a dictatorship, and in my humble opinion it would have not had a snowball's chance of getting ratified; even as it was, that process was no sure thing. So that's why they left it blank – while the Federalist majority intended all along that such a power should, indeed, be owned by the Judicial Branch so that the new government could (with a little delay, and with its cooperation) do anything it wanted to do, while operating under the pretense of being strictly limited.

So Congress' 1789 attempt to endow the Supreme Court with a new power (to hear certain cases with original jurisdiction) was not accidental, but deliberate; that particular power wasn't very important, but it was to test the waters, establish a precedent. If they could grant it one small power then, they could later grant it bigger ones, and so eventually equip it with absolute, law-determining power. Take an inch at once, so as to take a mile later on.

Success came soon: Jefferson won the 1802 election and in the changeover from Adams' administration a certain judge, William Marbury, was not given his proper paperwork to take up an appointment in D.C. So he took advantage of the Judiciary Act, and filed with the Supreme Court a suit for a "writ of mandamus" – to handle that matter at once – against the new Secretary of State, Madison.

John Marshall's Supreme Court delivered a well-reasoned opinion, which confirmed that Marbury was properly entitled to his new job, but that the Supreme Court was not legally entitled to issue the requested writ. Marshall wrote that the Congress had no power to endow the Court with the right to hear such petitions as one of original jurisdiction, for by so doing it would have amended the Constitution, contrary to Article V. He was right; the 1789 Judiciary Act was unconstitutional. So as to clarify that Congress was not the final arbiter of law he then went on to write the sentence now engraved on the wall of the Supreme Court building:

IT IS EMPHATICALLY THE PROVINCE AND DUTY OF
THE JUDICIAL DEPARTMENT TO SAY WHAT THE LAW IS

Now, here's the awesome trick that was being pulled: in the very act of declaring that Congress was not entitled to amend the Constitution, Marshall's court was itself amending the Constitution! – or purporting to do so. Why? – because in Article Three, the Judicial Branch is not empowered to declare whether or not a law that Congress wrote conforms to the Constitution. That power of final arbitration or "judicial review" is simply not there. Hamilton wanted it there, and argued that it was implicitly there, but in fact it is not. Therefore, in issuing the Marbury opinion, Marshall put it there: he did for his own Branch exactly what the decision itself said was not allowed for another Branch.

Did his court have any alternative? – I don't think so, but to judge from the enthusiasm Marshall used in the quote above, I doubt whether that worried him. The Marbury decision filled in the blank check of Article Three; that was how power was grabbed. Since 1803, what is and is not law has been determined not by "The People" or their alleged representatives in Congress, but by a cabal of government people who decide what's to be done and, if challenged, get the Judicial Branch to declare it legal. The yawning chasm between what courts now routinely enforce regarding income tax, for example, and what USC Title 26 actually says (and indeed what the Supreme Court said about unapportioned direct taxes, between 1896 and 1921) is thereby fully explained: the Judicial Department "says what the law is," really and truly and actually, and so it's been ever since 1803 thanks to the empty text of Article Three and to Marbury v Madison.

Was the Marbury decision itself Constitutional? – that's the nub of the matter. No, of course it wasn't, for the Court exercised a power it had never been given. Yet on the other hand it exercised a power it had never been denied, either, and as Hamilton persuasively argued in the The Federalist #78, Judicial Review is quite customarily a normal function of high courts and so the power was implicit in Article Three even though not explicit. We can note also that even the power to decide simple cases of lawbreaking is not explicitly described there either, along with the prerequisite power to interpret what laws mean; yet those are accepted as normal functions of any judicial branch of government. In any case, who is to decide that key question? Some kind of super-supreme court? Sorry, that's not covered in the Constitution, not even in Article Eight. We have here reached the ultimate, fatal flaw in the pleasant fiction that governments are entities capable of being limited.

Ever since 1803, America's government has pretended to operate a limited, democratic republic but has actually been an oligopoly of lawyers. And since Article Three was crafted (and left blank) with all deliberate intent, I suggest that's the way the founders always planned it. The 1789 Judiciary Act was a kind of delayed-action poison pill, a really cunning plot, planned and executed by those honored even today as the founders of a free society. And this is perfectly logical; the notion that a government (something that governs) can ever be subject to limits (things that prevent governing) is nonsense on its face, an absolute contradiction.

May 8, 2010

Jim Davies [send him mail] is a retired businessman in New Hampshire who led the development of an on-line school of liberty in 2006, who expects to experience a free society in his lifetime, and who in 2008 wrote the books A Vision of Liberty, Transition to Liberty, and, in 2010, Denial of Liberty and To FREEDOM from Fascism, America!

Copyright © 2010 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
« Last Edit: 2012-March-11 05:04:39 PM by DennisLeeWilson » Logged

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« Reply #2 on: 2012-April-06 10:34:18 AM »

Judicial Review?
http://atlasshruggedcelebrationday.com/simplemachinesforum/index.php?topic=136.msg637#msg637

http://www.lewrockwell.com/blog/lewrw/archives/109524.html
Judicial Review?
Posted by Lew Rockwell on April 5, 2012 01:58 PM

I hate to disagree with Judge Jerry Smith, but judicial review is a usurped power not present in the constitution. The anti-federalists had anticipated it, however, seeing it as just another of the viciously increased federal powers to be enabled by the new constitution as versus the far more libertarian Articles, which had been overthrown in the federalist coup at Philadelphia. Jerry is right to see bad motives in Obama's comments, however; he's building the executive dictatorship.

UPDATE A dissent from Kevin Gutzman:

    The alternative to judicial review is for judges to enforce laws they adjudge unconstitutional.  You can't really be advocating that.

    Judicial review is not a usurped power.  Rather, Federalists sold the Constitution partly by saying that it would feature judicial review.  Yes, Antifederalists in New York criticized the idea, but Patrick Henry in Virginia said he wished there were going to be judicial review, but he doubted federal judges would dare to stand up to Congress.

    We could note, however, that there was virtually no mention in the Virginia materials of the idea of federal judicial review of state enactments, a power that the federal courts claimed early in the 19th century and have come to exercise more and more promiscuously -- without any real check on their doing so -- in our day.  Their facetious "constitutional" holdings against state governments have indeed been usurpations, but that is less due to judicial review than to out-and-out lawlessness.

UPDATE A dissent from Len Budney:

    I am not a constitutional scholar, but I would think that a caveat is in order when saying that judicial review is unconstitutional. I'd certainly agree that the failure of the supreme court to strike down a law should never be interpreted as evidence of its constitutionality; that's exactly how we got the system of "slow motion collusion" we have today in which the legislature usurps unconstitutional powers, and the supreme court then blesses the usurpation and makes it holy.

    The converse, however, I don't think is true: when the court does strike down a law as unconstitutional, they are doing their job properly. An unconstitutional law is void on its face, and the supreme court, upholding the as the supreme law of the land, therefore has no choice but to nullify unconstitutional laws by refusing to uphold them.

    Another point on which I'd disagree with the concept of judicial review is this idea that it is uniquely the supreme court's business to be deciding which laws are constitutional. Nullification is everyone's job, down to the lowliest juror. The supreme court exists in part as a final backstop, to nullify laws that have not already been nullified by a President's failure to veto them, states' failure to disobey them, cops' failure to neglect enforcement, prosecutors' failure to refrain from filing charges, jurors' failure to acquit, and several layers of judges' failure to dismiss. It is all of their failures that gives the SCOTUS such devastating power as the sole arbiter of constitutionality.

    As for your remarks about the Articles of Confederation, spot on as usual.

UPDATE from Scott Evans:

    Count me among those who side with you against those who dissent from your opinion. In reading Article III, Sections 2 and 3, in which the
    scope and powers of the federal judiciary are enumerated, NEVER ONCE is authority of the judiciary to review acts of the legislature even
    hinted at, let alone clearly stated. Since the Constitution was ostensibly written to specifically enumerate the powers of the federal
    government, and does so in Articles I and II, there is no reason for anyone to believe that the judiciary was intended to be an exception.

    While your critics mention that certain among the founders supposedly expressed the desire to see judicial review included as an enumerated
    power, and while such a power MIGHT under certain IDEAL conditions be desirable, the issue at hand is what the Constitution specifically
    permits. This being the case, the fact that judicial review is clearly not among those enumerated in Article III, Sections 2 and 3 makes it an
    illegitimate act by the SCOTUS. Short of an amendment to the Constitution, nothing legitimizes the act, therefore making it a power
    continuously usurped for the last 209 years.

« Last Edit: 2012-April-06 10:36:24 AM by DennisLeeWilson » Logged

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« Reply #3 on: 2012-April-06 10:48:43 AM »

http://www.lewrockwell.com/blog/lewrw/archives/109562.html
Review: Judicial? Or Unjudicious?
Posted by Christopher Manion on April 6, 2012 07:33 AM

Lew, the notion of judicial review relies on an understanding of what is judicious in the first place. There are two views of this jurisprudential preamble to positive (not positivist!) law. One assumes that the Constitution is the fundamental law of the land and must be followed. That assumption rests on metaphysics (and the classical understanding of jus before Francis Bacon: that justice and law must reflect what is right by nature (hence, the natural law). This view also confirms the all-important concept of limits — limited government, the separation of powers, and the limits on those powers themselves and those who exercise them. The Founders' generation fully understood the metaphysical nature of law and that understanding informed the adoption of the Constitution.

The second approach views the Constitution as a "living document" — one which can be interpreted anew by the constantly progressing human intellect and those enlightened few who possess it. I recall Thurgood Marshall's hatred of the Founding Fathers... but his willingness, nonetheless, to interpret the Constitution — not in the light of the law, of course, but in the superior view of Thurgood Marshall.

Of course, Marshall was not alone: Chief Justice Earl Warren confirmed the Marshall approach when he once explained the question that always informed his judgment regarding the decision, whether or not a law was constitutional: "Is it fair?"

Thus today, in the hands of the elite, the constitutional label of "Judicial Review" is actually a whim slapped onto the law of the land, representing little more than a capricious and increasingly shallow egoism. The Congress — equally shallow and capricious — is willing to swallow it because the Congress has for years been pleased to blame the Court, and not itself, for the degradation of the law by the court for the past 90 years or so. The alternative? Why, impeachment, of course. It is the Congress's role to decide what is "fair" — subject, always, to the metaphysical limits placed on congressional powers by the Constitution.

What is at work here is the collision between the humility of the civilized judge before the law — humilitas — versus the inordinate pride of the robed barbarian — superbia vitae.

A parallel attack by the Court on the Constitution is described in Cancer In The Constitution, a booklet published forty years ago describing how earlier courts destroyed the constitutional limits on the federal government's power. "For the 32 years of service together on the Supreme Court, Justices Black and Douglas have been repetitiously citing each other as authority for a gross and gratuitous misconstruction of the First and 14th Amendments,” Clarence Manion, former Dean of Notre Dame Law School, wrote.

“The accumulation of these malignant constitutional misconstructions of the first eight amendments with the 14th has placed a cancer near the heart of our constitutional system which is proliferated with each successive term of the United States Supreme Court."

The article linked above that cites my father's work (which is itself out of print) also contains a fascinating observation as true today as it was forty years ago:

"Dr. Cornellius Cotter, Professor of Political Science at the University of Wisconsin, appeared before a special Senate committee in April, 1973. He remarked: “You know, Senator Mathias, it has been said—and, I think wisely so—that if the United States ever developed into a totalitarian state we would not know it. We would not know that it had happened. It would be all so gradual, the ritualism would all be retained as a facade to disguise what had happened. Most people in the United States, in official position, would continue to do the sorts of things that they are doing now. The changes would have all been so subtle although so fundamental that people generally would be unaware.”
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